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Fees
hike likely to force more children out of school
IRIN
News
April 11, 2006
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=52742
JOHANNESBURG
- Parents and educationists in Zimbabwe have warned that a rise
of more than 1,000 percent in school fees will force larger numbers
of children to drop out and preclude others from all education.
Inflation has
hit a new high of 913 percent, bringing a 12-fold rise in the cost
of essentials. All schools, including those run by the government,
said they would have to enforce the increases, effective from May.
This is the
second time this year that school fees have been hiked. Parents
had to fork out more money in January this year after private and
missionary schools raised tuition by between 150 percent and 500
percent. From May, the fees in government-run primary schools will
go up from US $4 a term to $18, while pupils in missionary schools
will pay $564 instead of $221 per term. Pupils in private schools
will have to lay out around $1,000, up from $440 they paid last
term.
"To say
the increase is too much is to understate this problem - it is simply
unaffordable for everyone. This is no longer a matter of haves and
have-nots; this increase is too much for everyone, poor and rich,"
a parent in Zimbabwe's second city, Bulawayo, remarked.
According to
the Consumer Council
of Zimbabwe, an average family of five requires at least $350
every month for essential food and services, but average monthly
incomes are often less than $100.
Leonard Nkala,
former president of the Zimbabwe Teachers Association, told IRIN
that the new fee structure could only worsen the school dropout
rate, and many children would miss the opportunity of ever going
to school.
"Inasmuch
as people struggle to send their children to school, even in these
difficult circumstances, we have come to a point where people just
want to give up. Many people are now talking more about practical
courses, which are cheaper and shorter, than the academic process,
which has just become unaffordable," he commented.
According to
UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) statistics for the period 1996 to 2004,
only 44 percent of boys and 42 percent of girls enrolled in a secondary
school attended classes. "Zimbabwean children are faced with
some of the worst hardships confronting children anywhere in the
world," said UNICEF spokesman James Elder.
Zimbabwe has
been experiencing runaway price increases since 2000, causing living
standards to plummet as salaries failed to match the rate of inflation.
Many parents told IRIN that their children would have to drop out
of school and look for work to help support the family.
The high cost
of schooling has eroded the long-held notion that education was
the right of every Zimbabwean, said Nkala. "Education is now
for those with the money ... given the widespread retrenchments,
soaring unemployment rates and a food crisis that refuses to go."
The ministry
of education was unable to comment on whether the government, which
reimposed price controls on basic commodities last week, would move
to act against the tuition fee increases.
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